Time-Based Switching Control of Genetic Regulatory Networks: Toward Sequential Drug Intake for Cancer Therapy. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • As cancer growth and development typically involves multiple genes and pathways, combination therapy has been touted as the standard of care in the treatment of cancer. However, drug toxicity becomes a major concern whenever a patient takes 2 or more drugs simultaneously at the maximum tolerable dosage. A potential solution would be administering the drugs in a sequential or alternating manner rather than concurrently. This study therefore examines the feasibility of such an approach from a switched system control perspective. Particularly, we study how genetic regulatory systems respond to sequential (switched) drug inputs using the time-based switching mechanism. The design of the time-driven drug switching function guarantees the stability of the genetic regulatory system and the repression of the diseased genes. Simulation results using proof-of-concept models and the proliferation and survival pathways with sequential drug inputs show the effectiveness of the proposed approach.

published proceedings

  • Cancer Inform

altmetric score

  • 0.5

author list (cited authors)

  • Oduola, W. O., Li, X., Duan, C., Qian, L., Wu, F., & Dougherty, E. R.

citation count

  • 2

complete list of authors

  • Oduola, Wasiu Opeyemi||Li, Xiangfang||Duan, Chang||Qian, Lijun||Wu, Fen||Dougherty, Edward R

publication date

  • January 2017